Tolkien review – affecting biopic of the Lord of the Rings
creator
3 / 5 stars 3 out of 5 stars.
This refreshing origins story, starring Nicholas Hoult,
traces the early life of JRR Tolkien as he makes friends at Oxford, finds love
and faces the horror of war
Peter Bradshaw
@PeterBradshaw1
Thu 2 May 2019 13.00 BST Last modified on Fri 3 May 2019
14.25 BST
A sweet innocence and high-mindedness pervade this movie
from screenwriters David Gleeson and Stephen Beresford and the Finnish director
Dome Karukoski. It’s about the early life of JRR Tolkien – who, like CS Lewis,
became a staggeringly successful author but remained an unworldly Oxford don to
the end of his days, never dreaming of the kind of mega-celebrity and
super-wealth that writers such as JK Rowling or George RR Martin enjoy.
Nicholas Hoult plays the doe-eyed young John Ronald Reuel
Tolkien, an orphaned boy at King Edward’s School, Birmingham, with a brilliant
facility for languages who makes three good friends there (his “fellowship”)
and falls shyly in love with the young woman at his boarding house, Edith Bratt
(Lily Collins), but who is forced by his Catholic guardian into choosing
between early marriage and going up to Oxford.
The story is told via flashbacks from his soldier’s
existence at the Somme in 1916, worrying about his schoolroom comrades and
agonising over the love he might have lost. There are various moments that are
supposed to be goosebump-inducing premonitions of Tolkien’s future created
world (at the Somme, he has a batman called Sam, played by Craig Roberts) and
visions of dragons in the midst of the western front carnage. But the film,
understandably perhaps, can’t reconcile his romantic and mythic vision of
battle with the banal horror of the first world war.
I very much enjoyed the young Tolkien’s prewar ecstatic
conversion to the world of philology at Oxford, with Derek Jacobi’s
sharp-tongued professor telling him to write a 5,000-word essay on the Norse
influence on Sir Gawain and the Green Knight before teatime. (Sadly, the film
doesn’t show him having to do that.)
This is a very male world and perhaps the inner life of
Edith remains a mystery (as perhaps it might have been for Tolkien), but its
earnestness and idealism are refreshing.
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